Cool Down Sir...
Again, defending is one thing and taking the war into another country is completely different. if you refer to the post I replied, I said that even if you protect your land successfully( inshallah) it would be tougher to beat and then get into Burma's territory.
Time is so different now-a-days. Otherwise, BD could have impose war on Burma at will. You have to see the map of Burma from a satellite and see its population in Arakan as Bangali Muslims. They are our very ill-mannered ( yes, a little more than us) cousines in Arakan. They have been living there for many centuries after they have migrated from Arabia and Bengal proper long before Burma annexed Arakan in 1784.
Now, about map. Burma mainland is completely separated from OUR Arakan by the Arakan Range of mountains. This Range is the reason that Arakan maintained its independence. However, when Bengal was already occupied by the British and Muslim power was vanquished there, the Burmese occupied this independent land in 1784 fully knowing that there would be no troop contingent from Bengal to support their brethren there. Their assumption was correct.
Arakanese Muslims desparately want to join their cousins in BD, we are also eager to join them. But, the days are not 1784, it is 2009. BD cannot move without fearing its effects on international relationships.
When former BD President Sheikh Mujibur Rahman met his Burmese counterpart, where I do not know, he emphatically told him that wherever Bangla speaking people lived, Bangladesh regard it as its own.
It was an indirect threat, there is no doubt about it. Only after his death, the Burmese govt started to punish our dark-skinned cousins by expelling them from their ancestral lands. BD economy was always weak and the leaders were without hard balls (you perhaps know women do not have any balls). So, the Burmese kept on sending their Muslims to BD. 500,000 or more are in BD now.
Now, time is ripe for either their repatriation to Arakan or the annexation of Arakan by BD. I will prefer the second option. There is no future of Burma and there is no future of our cousins in the Union of Burma. Burmese Junta keeps on exloring oil and gas in Arakan to build an army that kills only its own population.
When BD keeps on developing, our cousins there are living in poor conditions. It is time the situation is rectified by the concerned parties with blood sheddings, if needed. Arakanese are eagerly seeking our help. They are for a separation from Burma.
BD govt must enact an Arakan policy and its military must enact a doctrine to support that policy.